On Fri, Feb 08, 2002 at 06:55:21PM -0500, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> The ltsp-3.0 documentation has a chapter on building
> kernels, and in there is the instructions for building
> a kernel without the initrd and statically linking the
> specific network driver into the kernel. The result
> shou
Martin,
The standard LTSP kernels have the initrd included in
them. this is for flexibility so the NIC will
be automatically detected and the NFS server
can be specified as a separate server.
The ltsp-3.0 documentation has a chapter on building
kernels, and in there is the instructions for buil
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> Why not use the 2.4 kernels ?
I have i486-66MHz 16MB Ram - Clients,
the boot & run fast & smooth with the old LTSP
(kernel 2.2 and XFree3)
now, becaues I was curious, I tried LTSP 3.0
with a new server and different clients (i486,P75,P100)
- booting is slower
- login a
martin,
Once you resolve the NFS path problem, you'll then
run into the issue of the 2.2 kernels NOT having devfs
support. That is required by LTSP-3.0.
I've heard there are patches for 2.2 series, but I haven't
tried it myself.
Why not use the 2.4 kernels ?
Jim McQuillan
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Hi all!
I have LTSP 3.0 but like to use the old Linux-Kernel 2.2
on some Terminals.
The old Kernel wants to mount /tftpboot/lts/ltsroot
as NFS-root.
How can I change it to /opt/ltsp/i386?
Thanx,
Martin Herweg
_
Ltsp-